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Useful Reading: Britain
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Home, Sweet Home
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Useful Reading: England
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Pretty Girl Milking Her Cow
Silent, Oh Moyle
The Girl I Left Behind Me
Useful Reading: Ireland
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Afton Water
My Boy Tammy
The Bluebell of Scotland
Useful Reading: Scotland
Wales
Welsh Airs
The
Relicks
of Edward Jones
Morfa Rhuddlan
Useful Reading: Wales
Concert
Concert video
Concert programme
Gallery
Blog
The Romantic National Song Network: the story so far… by Kirsteen McCue
“Erin go Bragh”: migration, nationalism and resistance in a nineteenth-century street song, by I. J. Corfe
What makes a song ‘national’? William Shield and Thomas Holcroft’s “Down the bourn and thro’ the mead”, alias “Johnny and Mary: A favourite Scots song” by Amélie Addison
‘Auld Robin Gray’ by David Kennerley
John Malchair’s categories of music: Welsh, Irish, Scotch by Alice Little
A New Irish Song by Ian Newman
Reflections on our RNSN concert of British National Songs 1750-1850: by members of the RNSN
Singing British National Songs 1750-1850: our performers reflect on the RNSN concert on 18 March 2019
Spectacles of Song and the “Reconstructing Early Circus” Database by Leith Davis
On Englishness by Alice Little
‘With Such Great Variety and True Musical Merit’: The Dissemination of Scottish National Song Culture in Civil War America by Catherine Bateson
National Jane by Jeanice Brooks
National Song in The Gentle Shepherd: Original Impurity in Scottish Pastoral by Steve Newman
Welsh song and the London stage by Elizabeth Edwards
Tracing ‘The Yellow Hair’d Laddie’ by Brianna Robertson-Kirkland
The Song of the Western Men by Derek B. Scott
Piano Variations and Shaping the Foreign Popularity of Scottish Tunes by Sarah Clemmens Waltz
Revisiting the Achievements of Song-Collector Alexander Campbell by Karen McAulay(i)
Personally-Bound Song Collections: Combining Popular Trends with Nostalgia by Brianna Robertson-Kirkland
Felix Yaniewicz and the metamorphoses of song by Josie Dixon
Useful reading
Britain
England
Ireland
Scotland
Wales
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Silent, Oh Moyle
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Welcome
About the Project
Network members
Contact
Britain
Rule Britannia
Britons, Strike Home!
English, Scots and Irishmen
Useful Reading: Britain
England
True Courage
Home, Sweet Home
The Lass of Richmond Hill
Useful Reading: England
Ireland
Pretty Girl Milking Her Cow
Silent, Oh Moyle
The Girl I Left Behind Me
Useful Reading: Ireland
Scotland
Afton Water
My Boy Tammy
The Bluebell of Scotland
Useful Reading: Scotland
Wales
Welsh Airs
The
Relicks
of Edward Jones
Morfa Rhuddlan
Useful Reading: Wales
Concert
Concert video
Concert programme
Gallery
Blog
The Romantic National Song Network: the story so far… by Kirsteen McCue
“Erin go Bragh”: migration, nationalism and resistance in a nineteenth-century street song, by I. J. Corfe
What makes a song ‘national’? William Shield and Thomas Holcroft’s “Down the bourn and thro’ the mead”, alias “Johnny and Mary: A favourite Scots song” by Amélie Addison
‘Auld Robin Gray’ by David Kennerley
John Malchair’s categories of music: Welsh, Irish, Scotch by Alice Little
A New Irish Song by Ian Newman
Reflections on our RNSN concert of British National Songs 1750-1850: by members of the RNSN
Singing British National Songs 1750-1850: our performers reflect on the RNSN concert on 18 March 2019
Spectacles of Song and the “Reconstructing Early Circus” Database by Leith Davis
On Englishness by Alice Little
‘With Such Great Variety and True Musical Merit’: The Dissemination of Scottish National Song Culture in Civil War America by Catherine Bateson
National Jane by Jeanice Brooks
National Song in The Gentle Shepherd: Original Impurity in Scottish Pastoral by Steve Newman
Welsh song and the London stage by Elizabeth Edwards
Tracing ‘The Yellow Hair’d Laddie’ by Brianna Robertson-Kirkland
The Song of the Western Men by Derek B. Scott
Piano Variations and Shaping the Foreign Popularity of Scottish Tunes by Sarah Clemmens Waltz
Revisiting the Achievements of Song-Collector Alexander Campbell by Karen McAulay(i)
Personally-Bound Song Collections: Combining Popular Trends with Nostalgia by Brianna Robertson-Kirkland
Felix Yaniewicz and the metamorphoses of song by Josie Dixon
Useful reading
Britain
England
Ireland
Scotland
Wales